Climate can influence national character егэ ответы

Задание №9090.
Аудирование. ЕГЭ по английскому

Вы услышите 6 высказываний. Установите соответствие между высказываниями каждого говорящего A—F и утверждениями, данными в списке 1—7. Используйте каждое утверждение, обозначенное соответствующей цифрой, только один раз. В задании есть одно лишнее утверждение. Прослушайте запись дважды.

1. Climate can influence national character.
2. The weather changes according to some objective phenomena.
3. The stock market depends on weather conditions.
4. Bad weather can be the result of human behavior.
5. Wet weather can be good in any season.
6. Some people have a gift for predicting things.
7. The weather can affect people’s health and emotions.

Говорящий A B C D E F
Утверждение            

Решение:
Утверждение 5 (Wet weather can be good in any season. — Влажная погода может быть хорошей в любое время года) соответствует высказыванию спикера A: «I like it when it rains. The heavier the better…»

Утверждение 1 (Climate can influence national character. — Климат может влиять на национальный характер) соответствует высказыванию спикера B: «I agree with the idea that climate can affect our moods and even national traits.»

Утверждение 4 (Bad weather can be the result of human behavior. — Плохая погода может быть результатом человеческого поведения) соответствует высказыванию спикера C: «To my mind the deterioration of weather conditions happens due to human activities.»

Утверждение 2 (The weather changes according to some objective phenomena. — Погода меняется в зависимости от объективных явлений) соответствует высказыванию спикера D: «In fact the weather is controlled by systems moving around areas of the globe.»

Утверждение 6 (Some people have a gift for predicting things. — У некоторых людей есть дар предсказывать вещи) соответствует высказыванию спикера E: «I’ve read that a recent study suggests that certain people may have a unique special gift for predicting the weather…»

Утверждение 7 (The weather can affect people’s health and emotions. — Погода может повлиять на здоровье и эмоции людей) соответствует высказыванию спикера F: «And it seems to me that the weather really is responsible for a physical and emotional state.»

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Источник: ФИПИ. Открытый банк тестовых заданий

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Вы услышите 6 высказываний. Установите соответствие между высказываниями каждого говорящего A–F и утверждениями, данными в списке 1–7. Используйте каждое утверждение, обозначенное соответствующей цифрой, только один раз. В задании есть одно лишнее утверждение. Вы услышите запись дважды.

Воспользуйтесь плеером, чтобы прослушать запись.

1.  The weather can affect people’s health and emotions.

2.  Bad weather can be the result of human behavior.

3.  The stock market depends on weather conditions.

4.  Some people have a gift for predicting things.

5.  Climate can influence national character.

6.  Wet weather can be good in any season.

7.  The weather changes according to some objective phenomena.

Говорящий A B C D E F
Утверждение

Расшифровка записи

Speaker A. I like it when it rains. The heavier — the better. The British say: “It’s lovely weather for ducks”. People think me strange, but that’s me. If it’s warm, it’s such a pleasure to walk on the rain, completely wet yet feeling like a child, if it’s cold outside, rain makes your home million times cozier. On such dais I cancel all my meetings and appointments. Rap up in a blanket and watch some good old film or soap. There’s nothing like rainy weather.

Speaker B. I agree with the idea that the climate can affect our moods and even national traits. In my country, for example, there is a wide variety of the weather conditions: from extreme cold to extreme hot. In a place where I live the weather is cold, the sky is cloudy and people’s behavior takes some certain characteristics. In this case people tend to be irritable but there are warm origins in our country where people are mostly really very friendly.

Speaker C. To my mind, the deterioration of the weather conditions happens due to human’s activities. Bad weather is just a result of our thoughtless behavior, such as nuclear tests and wars. Even if our individual negative thoughts can lead to bad weather. Our planet is a live organism, so when it falls ill in one place it’s other parts can suffer too. All negative energy of man-kind searches the way out and one of these is through bad weather conditions.

Speaker D. I believe, if you living in a place like Britain where the weather seems to change daily if not hourly sometimes, you can be forgiven for thinking that the weather is random. In fact, the weather is controlled by systems, moving around arias of the globe. In the UK the weather depends on depressions, often cold lose and anticyclones also known as highs. As far as I know, highs bring sunny weather while lose can bring unpleasant rain and wind.

Speaker E. I’ve read that the reason study suggests that certain people may have a unique special gift for predicting the weather, but it’s quite possible that these people would use that talent in another way. Since the same group have a remarkably considerable success in forecasting changes in another chaotic system — the stock market. Winning badpue wonderful, make millions in Wall street and know what to put on every single day — I’d really love it!

Speaker F. I feel a bit under the weather. It’s a common complete in Britain. Especially on Mondays. And it seems to me, that the weather is responsible for physical and emotional state. I think changeable weather makes hard to concentrate and I must say that hot weather makes me snappy. Some suggests that the weather also leads its mark on character but I reckon, that the economic, political and social factors have a stronger effect that the weather.

Спрятать пояснение

Пояснение.

A−6: There’s nothing like rainy weather…

B−5: …climate can affect our moods and trades…people are really very friendly.

C−2: …bad weather is a result of thoughtless behaviour….

D−7: …the weather seems to change daily…the weather is random..

E−4: some people have a unique special gift in predicting…

F−1: the weather is responsible for emotional and physical state…leaves it mark on character…

Источник: ЕГЭ по английскому языку 06.06.2013. Основная волна. Дальний Восток. Вариант 1

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  • Вариант 8

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Время

3:0:00

№1

Вы услышите 6 высказываний. Установите соответствие между высказываниями каждого говорящего A–F и утверждениями, данными в списке 1–7. Используйте каждое утверждение, обозначенное соответствующей цифрой, только один раз. В задании есть одно лишнее утверждение. Вы услышите запись дважды. Занесите свои ответы в таблицу.

1. Climate can influence national character

2. The weather changes according to some objective phenomena

3. The stock market depends on weather conditions

4. Bad weather can be the result of human behavior

5. Wet weather can be good in any season

6. Some people have a gift for predicting things

7. The weather can affect people’s health and emotions

№2

Вы услышите диалог. Определите, какие из приведённых утверждений А–G соответствуют содержанию текста (1 – True), какие не соответствуют (2 – False) и о чём в тексте не сказано, то есть на основании текста нельзя дать ни положительного, ни отрицательного ответа (3 – Not stated). Занесите номер выбранного Вами варианта ответа в таблицу. Вы услышите запись дважды.

A. Jackie and her boyfriend have purchased an accommodation

B. Jackie and Simon seem to split up soon

C. Jackie teaches economics at the University

D. David rents a flat

E. Jackie’s flat was quite expensive

F. Jackie’s boyfriend works in a bank

G. The two couples will have lunch out of town

№3

Вы услышите интервью. В задании запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2 или 3, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа. Вы услышите запись дважды.

3

Why did Helen change her original name?

1) She wanted to break her tribe traditions.

2) People found it difficult to pronounce it.

3) She did not like its meaning.

№4

Вы услышите интервью. В задании запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2 или 3, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа. Вы услышите запись дважды.

4

Which tradition, according to Helen, is still alive in Navaho lifestyle?

1) Horse riding.

2) Clothes.

3) Houses.

№5

Вы услышите интервью. В задании запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2 или 3, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа. Вы услышите запись дважды.

5

How does Helen characterize her family?

1) They stick to the reservation area.

2) It tries to preserve old traditions.

3) It is unusually big for Navaho tribes.

№6

Вы услышите интервью. В задании запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2 или 3, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа. Вы услышите запись дважды.

6

What is Helen’s opinion about keeping Navaho traditions?

1) Navaho people must assimilate into white culture.

2) Traditional lifestyle is appropriate only in reservations.

3) There should be a balance in accepting white culture.

№7

Вы услышите интервью. В задании запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2 или 3, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа. Вы услышите запись дважды.

7

What does Helen say about her knowledge of the Navaho language?

1) She used to be better at it.

2) She still has an excellent command of it.

3) Her speaking skills are better than her writing.

№8

Вы услышите интервью. В задании запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2 или 3, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа. Вы услышите запись дважды.

8

Which of the following weekend activities does Helen NOT mention as her habit?

1) Watching films.

2) Taking part in traditional ceremonies.

3) Meeting peers.

№9

Вы услышите интервью. В задании запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2 или 3, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа. Вы услышите запись дважды.

9

What does Helen dream of visiting?

1) Local places of interest.

2) American cities.

3) Countries on other continents.

№10

Установите соответствие заголовков 1–8 абзацам текста А–G. Занесите свои ответы в таблицу. Используйте каждую цифру только один раз. В задании одна тема лишняя.

1. Tourist Attraction Area 5. Water Takes the Secrets Away
2. Geographical Wonders  6. Mysterious Stones Origin
3. Conquerors’ Exploitation  7. Vanished in the Air
4. Before It Is Too Late  8. Roman Invention

A. For thousands of years, the Cantabrian Sea has periodically engulfed the massive rock formations on Cathedrals Beach in Galicia, north-western Spain, chipping the softened rock into soaring arches and dark caves. But as well as sculpting this revered and popular landscape, the constant floods may have also washed away evidence of ancient hidden treasure.

B. After the Romans conquered Galicia about 2,000 years ago, joining the territory to the vast and powerful Roman Empire, they minted coins with gold mined in the area. The Galician government, which still oversees abundant reserves of the precious metal, has recognized several local gold mines discovered and exploited by the invaders, who may have also extended their hunt for gold to the wet and weathered caves of Cathedrals Beach.

C. The government nowadays has expressed more interest in protecting Cathedrals Beach than commissioning a study on its past. It recently capped the number of people who can visit the popular site on peak travel dates, requiring online reservations for up to 4,812 visitors daily from July through September, and during Holy Week in the spring, a holiday in Spain when many residents travel. Nearly 250,000 reservations were made last summer, most of them by domestic travellers, according to the Galician government, which declared the beach a Natural Monument because of the beauty and rarity of its rock-studded vista.

D. The beach stretches along the coast of Lugo province in Galicia, a region best known for pilgrimages by foot to St James Cathedral in its capital, Santiago de Compostela, the reputed burial site of the saint. The pilgrims can continue to Cape Finisterre, a peninsula on the west coast of Galicia, which was considered the end of the world during the Roman era. A prehistoric circle of stones a mile from Cathedrals Beach, its purpose unknown, has been likened to Stonehenge in England.

E. Before those legends arose, about 350 million years ago, the ancient continents Laurussia and Gondwana collided, breaking apart a mountain range as tall as the Himalayas. It’s believed the rocks on Cathedrals Beach came from those mountains.

F. In the meantime, the beach continues to lose traces of its history. Scientists hope to unravel the area’s latest mystery and find the last vestiges of the past before they are gone, swallowed by the sea.

G. On a cliff overlooking Cathedrals Beach and the sea, geologists found an un-dated manmade canal carved in the ground, which bears similarities to canals used by the Romans to excavate gold mines in the area. During their searches for gold, the Romans would light fires on the ground and douse the flames with water carried by the canals, a process that cracked the ground so they could dig with hand tools.

№11

Прочитайте текст и заполните пропуски A-F частями предложений, обозначенными цифрами 1-7. Одна из частей в списке 1-7 лишняя. Занесите цифру, обозначающую соответствующую часть предложения, в таблицу

In an 1898 advertising poster, a man made of rubber rings hoists a giant champagne coupe full of broken glass and nails (garnished with a horseshoe) and toasts “Nunc est bibendum” — Latin for “Now is the time drink.” Michelin tyres, the ad implied, were tough enough to digest everything the road had to offer.

Advertising metaphor was a bit heavy-handed in 1898, but the idea of eating up the road (as delivered by that rotund rubber spokesman, formally known as Bibendum) would become the guiding principle of that fledgling French rubber company. And while durable tyres made them money, A_______________________.

In 1900, brothers Édouard and André Michelin released the first Guide Michelin. To the 3000 or so motorists in France who bought their tyres, they handed a slim book containing maps, basic maintenance instructions, and lists of mechanics, petrol stations, hotels, and — as information no more vital than the nearest gas pump — suggestions for restaurants along the routes. They were keen to make motoring a recreational hobby for the few well-to-do who actually owned cars, and realized B___________________would result in more wear (and the occasional hobnail puncture) on their flagship products.

The red guidebooks were soon vital automotive equipment, living in glove boxes long after gloves were passé. As more and more cars entered the roads, the addresses of service stations became less necessary, C_________________. In 1926, stars were added to establishments of special note, and a three-star system was implemented in 1933. To create the ratings, the company sends out an army of anonymous critics D_________________. They visit each restaurant several times, and then issue pronouncements that earn biblical reverence, a sort of Chow’s Little Red Book. The Guide Michelin’s genius may be its parsimony; unworthy restaurants are simply not listed, E__________________. Stars make or break both culinary careers and profit-and-loss reports, and chefs have driven themselves to madness and suicide in the quest to gain — F________________— a third star.

1. and the guides began to focus exclusively on hospitality

2. that was done according to the rules

3. another marketing gimmick would change the world of dining

4. or in the heartache of losing

5. that giving them places to go and advice on getting there

6. and three-star establishments are few and far between

7. who are called “inspectors”

№12

Прочитайте текст и выполните заданиt. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

Hong Kong is a city of contrasts: of new technology and old traditions, of high-rise buildings and stunning countryside, a hybrid between the East and the West. The territory’s flag bears a flower whose past, and future, are just as complicated. The flag of Hong Kong features a distinctive five-petalled white flower on a red background. This flower became Hong Kong’s emblem when the territory was handed over to China in 1997.

But the true origin of this mysterious plant has only been revealed in recent years. It is now the subject of community conservation projects hoping to save it from extinction. The flower in question is a peculiar plant known as the Hong Kong orchid tree. It is a native of the island of Hong Kong.Despite its name it is not an orchid, but rather a tree in the legume family, the group that includes peas and beans. However, its distinctive 15cm flowers are reminiscent of orchid flowers, and the common name stuck.

The first Hong Kong orchid tree was found around 1880 by Jean-Marie Delavay, a French Catholic missionary out hiking in the countryside. Near a ruined building, he found a single tree with incredible magenta flowers, and took a cutting.»He thought it was quite stunning, quite beautiful, and quite different to ones he had seen before, and so he took a cutting of it and brought it back to his sanatorium,» says data scientist Rob Davidson. Sanatoriums were popular in colonial times as a place of respite and recovery for missionaries that had contracted tropical diseases on their travels.

It is believed that all the Hong Kong orchid trees alive today are descendants of this single plant.»All the trees since then have been cultivated by hand, by someone who’s taken a bit of an old tree, and stuck it on to another root stock and let it grow from there,» says Davidson.This process is called «grafting». It has been familiar to gardeners and farmers for thousands of years, so much so that it is easy to forget that it is remarkable.

Only with modern genetics have scientists begun to unravel the mysterious origins of the Hong Kong orchid tree. A study published in 2005 revealed that the strange flower is actually a hybrid of two known species; the pink-flowered butterfly tree (B. variegata), and the purple-flowered B. purpurea. This explains why the trees can only reproduce with human help, by taking cuttings. Just like a mule, B. blakeana is a sterile hybrid. Hybridisation is when a new species is produced by combining half of the DNA of one species with half of the DNA of another. It is a hit-and-miss exercise. Most of the time, it fails because the two halves of DNA are simply too different to work together. The majority of hybrid embryos never develop.

Even when a hybrid does develop into an adult, they are often sterile. We may never know how the original hybrid tree came to be there. But scientists are now using modern genomic techniques to understand the orchid tree better. Lawrence Ramsden of the University of Hong Kong was a member of the team that discovered B. blakeana’s hybrid origin in 2005. He is now leading a search for mutant trees that are fertile. Such trees might exist: with a few mutations in the right places, a sterile B. blakeana could theoretically start producing viable seeds. If they do find a fertile B. blakeanatree, it might not be quite as beautiful as the sterile ones. That is because the flowers of sterile B. blakeana trees «stay in bloom longer because the plant doesn’t put any energy into producing seeds,» says Davidson.However, a fertile tree might just save the species. But until one is found, or one of the other approaches comes to fruition, the Hong Kong orchid tree will have to survive the way it has for the last century.

The orchid tree was chosen as Hong Kong’s emblem because it represents the merging of old and new. So it seems apt that the plant is itself a hybrid, and that it might be saved by melding new technology with old-fashioned amateur naturalism.

12

1) Compass points

2) Predators and herbivores

3) Urban and rural life

4) Traditional and modern

№13

Прочитайте текст и выполните заданиt. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

Hong Kong is a city of contrasts: of new technology and old traditions, of high-rise buildings and stunning countryside, a hybrid between the East and the West. The territory’s flag bears a flower whose past, and future, are just as complicated. The flag of Hong Kong features a distinctive five-petalled white flower on a red background. This flower became Hong Kong’s emblem when the territory was handed over to China in 1997.

But the true origin of this mysterious plant has only been revealed in recent years. It is now the subject of community conservation projects hoping to save it from extinction. The flower in question is a peculiar plant known as the Hong Kong orchid tree. It is a native of the island of Hong Kong.Despite its name it is not an orchid, but rather a tree in the legume family, the group that includes peas and beans. However, its distinctive 15cm flowers are reminiscent of orchid flowers, and the common name stuck.

The first Hong Kong orchid tree was found around 1880 by Jean-Marie Delavay, a French Catholic missionary out hiking in the countryside. Near a ruined building, he found a single tree with incredible magenta flowers, and took a cutting.»He thought it was quite stunning, quite beautiful, and quite different to ones he had seen before, and so he took a cutting of it and brought it back to his sanatorium,» says data scientist Rob Davidson. Sanatoriums were popular in colonial times as a place of respite and recovery for missionaries that had contracted tropical diseases on their travels.

It is believed that all the Hong Kong orchid trees alive today are descendants of this single plant.»All the trees since then have been cultivated by hand, by someone who’s taken a bit of an old tree, and stuck it on to another root stock and let it grow from there,» says Davidson.This process is called «grafting». It has been familiar to gardeners and farmers for thousands of years, so much so that it is easy to forget that it is remarkable.

Only with modern genetics have scientists begun to unravel the mysterious origins of the Hong Kong orchid tree. A study published in 2005 revealed that the strange flower is actually a hybrid of two known species; the pink-flowered butterfly tree (B. variegata), and the purple-flowered B. purpurea. This explains why the trees can only reproduce with human help, by taking cuttings. Just like a mule, B. blakeana is a sterile hybrid. Hybridisation is when a new species is produced by combining half of the DNA of one species with half of the DNA of another. It is a hit-and-miss exercise. Most of the time, it fails because the two halves of DNA are simply too different to work together. The majority of hybrid embryos never develop.

Even when a hybrid does develop into an adult, they are often sterile. We may never know how the original hybrid tree came to be there. But scientists are now using modern genomic techniques to understand the orchid tree better. Lawrence Ramsden of the University of Hong Kong was a member of the team that discovered B. blakeana’s hybrid origin in 2005. He is now leading a search for mutant trees that are fertile. Such trees might exist: with a few mutations in the right places, a sterile B. blakeana could theoretically start producing viable seeds. If they do find a fertile B. blakeanatree, it might not be quite as beautiful as the sterile ones. That is because the flowers of sterile B. blakeana trees «stay in bloom longer because the plant doesn’t put any energy into producing seeds,» says Davidson.However, a fertile tree might just save the species. But until one is found, or one of the other approaches comes to fruition, the Hong Kong orchid tree will have to survive the way it has for the last century.

The orchid tree was chosen as Hong Kong’s emblem because it represents the merging of old and new. So it seems apt that the plant is itself a hybrid, and that it might be saved by melding new technology with old-fashioned amateur naturalism.

13

The flower on the flag…

1) originally is from Hong Kong.

2) belongs to the orchid family.

3) has small flowers.

4) can be found in Hong Kong in big amount.

№14

Прочитайте текст и выполните заданиt. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

Hong Kong is a city of contrasts: of new technology and old traditions, of high-rise buildings and stunning countryside, a hybrid between the East and the West. The territory’s flag bears a flower whose past, and future, are just as complicated. The flag of Hong Kong features a distinctive five-petalled white flower on a red background. This flower became Hong Kong’s emblem when the territory was handed over to China in 1997.

But the true origin of this mysterious plant has only been revealed in recent years. It is now the subject of community conservation projects hoping to save it from extinction. The flower in question is a peculiar plant known as the Hong Kong orchid tree. It is a native of the island of Hong Kong.Despite its name it is not an orchid, but rather a tree in the legume family, the group that includes peas and beans. However, its distinctive 15cm flowers are reminiscent of orchid flowers, and the common name stuck.

The first Hong Kong orchid tree was found around 1880 by Jean-Marie Delavay, a French Catholic missionary out hiking in the countryside. Near a ruined building, he found a single tree with incredible magenta flowers, and took a cutting.»He thought it was quite stunning, quite beautiful, and quite different to ones he had seen before, and so he took a cutting of it and brought it back to his sanatorium,» says data scientist Rob Davidson. Sanatoriums were popular in colonial times as a place of respite and recovery for missionaries that had contracted tropical diseases on their travels.

It is believed that all the Hong Kong orchid trees alive today are descendants of this single plant.»All the trees since then have been cultivated by hand, by someone who’s taken a bit of an old tree, and stuck it on to another root stock and let it grow from there,» says Davidson.This process is called «grafting». It has been familiar to gardeners and farmers for thousands of years, so much so that it is easy to forget that it is remarkable.

Only with modern genetics have scientists begun to unravel the mysterious origins of the Hong Kong orchid tree. A study published in 2005 revealed that the strange flower is actually a hybrid of two known species; the pink-flowered butterfly tree (B. variegata), and the purple-flowered B. purpurea. This explains why the trees can only reproduce with human help, by taking cuttings. Just like a mule, B. blakeana is a sterile hybrid. Hybridisation is when a new species is produced by combining half of the DNA of one species with half of the DNA of another. It is a hit-and-miss exercise. Most of the time, it fails because the two halves of DNA are simply too different to work together. The majority of hybrid embryos never develop.

Even when a hybrid does develop into an adult, they are often sterile. We may never know how the original hybrid tree came to be there. But scientists are now using modern genomic techniques to understand the orchid tree better. Lawrence Ramsden of the University of Hong Kong was a member of the team that discovered B. blakeana’s hybrid origin in 2005. He is now leading a search for mutant trees that are fertile. Such trees might exist: with a few mutations in the right places, a sterile B. blakeana could theoretically start producing viable seeds. If they do find a fertile B. blakeanatree, it might not be quite as beautiful as the sterile ones. That is because the flowers of sterile B. blakeana trees «stay in bloom longer because the plant doesn’t put any energy into producing seeds,» says Davidson.However, a fertile tree might just save the species. But until one is found, or one of the other approaches comes to fruition, the Hong Kong orchid tree will have to survive the way it has for the last century.

The orchid tree was chosen as Hong Kong’s emblem because it represents the merging of old and new. So it seems apt that the plant is itself a hybrid, and that it might be saved by melding new technology with old-fashioned amateur naturalism.

14

Grafting…

1) is used by farmers only.

2) is a kind of cultivation.

3) is a simple process.

4) has been implemented recently.

№15

Прочитайте текст и выполните заданиt. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

Hong Kong is a city of contrasts: of new technology and old traditions, of high-rise buildings and stunning countryside, a hybrid between the East and the West. The territory’s flag bears a flower whose past, and future, are just as complicated. The flag of Hong Kong features a distinctive five-petalled white flower on a red background. This flower became Hong Kong’s emblem when the territory was handed over to China in 1997.

But the true origin of this mysterious plant has only been revealed in recent years. It is now the subject of community conservation projects hoping to save it from extinction. The flower in question is a peculiar plant known as the Hong Kong orchid tree. It is a native of the island of Hong Kong.Despite its name it is not an orchid, but rather a tree in the legume family, the group that includes peas and beans. However, its distinctive 15cm flowers are reminiscent of orchid flowers, and the common name stuck.

The first Hong Kong orchid tree was found around 1880 by Jean-Marie Delavay, a French Catholic missionary out hiking in the countryside. Near a ruined building, he found a single tree with incredible magenta flowers, and took a cutting.»He thought it was quite stunning, quite beautiful, and quite different to ones he had seen before, and so he took a cutting of it and brought it back to his sanatorium,» says data scientist Rob Davidson. Sanatoriums were popular in colonial times as a place of respite and recovery for missionaries that had contracted tropical diseases on their travels.

It is believed that all the Hong Kong orchid trees alive today are descendants of this single plant.»All the trees since then have been cultivated by hand, by someone who’s taken a bit of an old tree, and stuck it on to another root stock and let it grow from there,» says Davidson.This process is called «grafting». It has been familiar to gardeners and farmers for thousands of years, so much so that it is easy to forget that it is remarkable.

Only with modern genetics have scientists begun to unravel the mysterious origins of the Hong Kong orchid tree. A study published in 2005 revealed that the strange flower is actually a hybrid of two known species; the pink-flowered butterfly tree (B. variegata), and the purple-flowered B. purpurea. This explains why the trees can only reproduce with human help, by taking cuttings. Just like a mule, B. blakeana is a sterile hybrid. Hybridisation is when a new species is produced by combining half of the DNA of one species with half of the DNA of another. It is a hit-and-miss exercise. Most of the time, it fails because the two halves of DNA are simply too different to work together. The majority of hybrid embryos never develop.

Even when a hybrid does develop into an adult, they are often sterile. We may never know how the original hybrid tree came to be there. But scientists are now using modern genomic techniques to understand the orchid tree better. Lawrence Ramsden of the University of Hong Kong was a member of the team that discovered B. blakeana’s hybrid origin in 2005. He is now leading a search for mutant trees that are fertile. Such trees might exist: with a few mutations in the right places, a sterile B. blakeana could theoretically start producing viable seeds. If they do find a fertile B. blakeanatree, it might not be quite as beautiful as the sterile ones. That is because the flowers of sterile B. blakeana trees «stay in bloom longer because the plant doesn’t put any energy into producing seeds,» says Davidson.However, a fertile tree might just save the species. But until one is found, or one of the other approaches comes to fruition, the Hong Kong orchid tree will have to survive the way it has for the last century.

The orchid tree was chosen as Hong Kong’s emblem because it represents the merging of old and new. So it seems apt that the plant is itself a hybrid, and that it might be saved by melding new technology with old-fashioned amateur naturalism.

15

According to the genetic research, the flower on the flag …

1) can reproduce by itself.

2) is a parasite.

3) is a mutant.

4) can grow only in Asia.

№16

Прочитайте текст и выполните заданиt. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

Hong Kong is a city of contrasts: of new technology and old traditions, of high-rise buildings and stunning countryside, a hybrid between the East and the West. The territory’s flag bears a flower whose past, and future, are just as complicated. The flag of Hong Kong features a distinctive five-petalled white flower on a red background. This flower became Hong Kong’s emblem when the territory was handed over to China in 1997.

But the true origin of this mysterious plant has only been revealed in recent years. It is now the subject of community conservation projects hoping to save it from extinction. The flower in question is a peculiar plant known as the Hong Kong orchid tree. It is a native of the island of Hong Kong.Despite its name it is not an orchid, but rather a tree in the legume family, the group that includes peas and beans. However, its distinctive 15cm flowers are reminiscent of orchid flowers, and the common name stuck.

The first Hong Kong orchid tree was found around 1880 by Jean-Marie Delavay, a French Catholic missionary out hiking in the countryside. Near a ruined building, he found a single tree with incredible magenta flowers, and took a cutting.»He thought it was quite stunning, quite beautiful, and quite different to ones he had seen before, and so he took a cutting of it and brought it back to his sanatorium,» says data scientist Rob Davidson. Sanatoriums were popular in colonial times as a place of respite and recovery for missionaries that had contracted tropical diseases on their travels.

It is believed that all the Hong Kong orchid trees alive today are descendants of this single plant.»All the trees since then have been cultivated by hand, by someone who’s taken a bit of an old tree, and stuck it on to another root stock and let it grow from there,» says Davidson.This process is called «grafting». It has been familiar to gardeners and farmers for thousands of years, so much so that it is easy to forget that it is remarkable.

Only with modern genetics have scientists begun to unravel the mysterious origins of the Hong Kong orchid tree. A study published in 2005 revealed that the strange flower is actually a hybrid of two known species; the pink-flowered butterfly tree (B. variegata), and the purple-flowered B. purpurea. This explains why the trees can only reproduce with human help, by taking cuttings. Just like a mule, B. blakeana is a sterile hybrid. Hybridisation is when a new species is produced by combining half of the DNA of one species with half of the DNA of another. It is a hit-and-miss exercise. Most of the time, it fails because the two halves of DNA are simply too different to work together. The majority of hybrid embryos never develop.

Even when a hybrid does develop into an adult, they are often sterile. We may never know how the original hybrid tree came to be there. But scientists are now using modern genomic techniques to understand the orchid tree better. Lawrence Ramsden of the University of Hong Kong was a member of the team that discovered B. blakeana’s hybrid origin in 2005. He is now leading a search for mutant trees that are fertile. Such trees might exist: with a few mutations in the right places, a sterile B. blakeana could theoretically start producing viable seeds. If they do find a fertile B. blakeanatree, it might not be quite as beautiful as the sterile ones. That is because the flowers of sterile B. blakeana trees «stay in bloom longer because the plant doesn’t put any energy into producing seeds,» says Davidson.However, a fertile tree might just save the species. But until one is found, or one of the other approaches comes to fruition, the Hong Kong orchid tree will have to survive the way it has for the last century.

The orchid tree was chosen as Hong Kong’s emblem because it represents the merging of old and new. So it seems apt that the plant is itself a hybrid, and that it might be saved by melding new technology with old-fashioned amateur naturalism.

16

The fertile orchid tree…

1) is more beautiful than the sterile one.

2) stays in bloom longer that the sterile one.

3) doesn’t exist.

4) has been found.

№17

Прочитайте текст и выполните заданиt. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

Hong Kong is a city of contrasts: of new technology and old traditions, of high-rise buildings and stunning countryside, a hybrid between the East and the West. The territory’s flag bears a flower whose past, and future, are just as complicated. The flag of Hong Kong features a distinctive five-petalled white flower on a red background. This flower became Hong Kong’s emblem when the territory was handed over to China in 1997.

But the true origin of this mysterious plant has only been revealed in recent years. It is now the subject of community conservation projects hoping to save it from extinction. The flower in question is a peculiar plant known as the Hong Kong orchid tree. It is a native of the island of Hong Kong.Despite its name it is not an orchid, but rather a tree in the legume family, the group that includes peas and beans. However, its distinctive 15cm flowers are reminiscent of orchid flowers, and the common name stuck.

The first Hong Kong orchid tree was found around 1880 by Jean-Marie Delavay, a French Catholic missionary out hiking in the countryside. Near a ruined building, he found a single tree with incredible magenta flowers, and took a cutting.»He thought it was quite stunning, quite beautiful, and quite different to ones he had seen before, and so he took a cutting of it and brought it back to his sanatorium,» says data scientist Rob Davidson. Sanatoriums were popular in colonial times as a place of respite and recovery for missionaries that had contracted tropical diseases on their travels.

It is believed that all the Hong Kong orchid trees alive today are descendants of this single plant.»All the trees since then have been cultivated by hand, by someone who’s taken a bit of an old tree, and stuck it on to another root stock and let it grow from there,» says Davidson.This process is called «grafting». It has been familiar to gardeners and farmers for thousands of years, so much so that it is easy to forget that it is remarkable.

Only with modern genetics have scientists begun to unravel the mysterious origins of the Hong Kong orchid tree. A study published in 2005 revealed that the strange flower is actually a hybrid of two known species; the pink-flowered butterfly tree (B. variegata), and the purple-flowered B. purpurea. This explains why the trees can only reproduce with human help, by taking cuttings. Just like a mule, B. blakeana is a sterile hybrid. Hybridisation is when a new species is produced by combining half of the DNA of one species with half of the DNA of another. It is a hit-and-miss exercise. Most of the time, it fails because the two halves of DNA are simply too different to work together. The majority of hybrid embryos never develop.

Even when a hybrid does develop into an adult, they are often sterile. We may never know how the original hybrid tree came to be there. But scientists are now using modern genomic techniques to understand the orchid tree better. Lawrence Ramsden of the University of Hong Kong was a member of the team that discovered B. blakeana’s hybrid origin in 2005. He is now leading a search for mutant trees that are fertile. Such trees might exist: with a few mutations in the right places, a sterile B. blakeana could theoretically start producing viable seeds. If they do find a fertile B. blakeanatree, it might not be quite as beautiful as the sterile ones. That is because the flowers of sterile B. blakeana trees «stay in bloom longer because the plant doesn’t put any energy into producing seeds,» says Davidson.However, a fertile tree might just save the species. But until one is found, or one of the other approaches comes to fruition, the Hong Kong orchid tree will have to survive the way it has for the last century.

The orchid tree was chosen as Hong Kong’s emblem because it represents the merging of old and new. So it seems apt that the plant is itself a hybrid, and that it might be saved by melding new technology with old-fashioned amateur naturalism.

17

What does “apt” mean?

1) Appropriate

2) Elegant

3) Obvious

4) Important

№18

Прочитайте текст и выполните заданиt. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

Hong Kong is a city of contrasts: of new technology and old traditions, of high-rise buildings and stunning countryside, a hybrid between the East and the West. The territory’s flag bears a flower whose past, and future, are just as complicated. The flag of Hong Kong features a distinctive five-petalled white flower on a red background. This flower became Hong Kong’s emblem when the territory was handed over to China in 1997.

But the true origin of this mysterious plant has only been revealed in recent years. It is now the subject of community conservation projects hoping to save it from extinction. The flower in question is a peculiar plant known as the Hong Kong orchid tree. It is a native of the island of Hong Kong.Despite its name it is not an orchid, but rather a tree in the legume family, the group that includes peas and beans. However, its distinctive 15cm flowers are reminiscent of orchid flowers, and the common name stuck.

The first Hong Kong orchid tree was found around 1880 by Jean-Marie Delavay, a French Catholic missionary out hiking in the countryside. Near a ruined building, he found a single tree with incredible magenta flowers, and took a cutting.»He thought it was quite stunning, quite beautiful, and quite different to ones he had seen before, and so he took a cutting of it and brought it back to his sanatorium,» says data scientist Rob Davidson. Sanatoriums were popular in colonial times as a place of respite and recovery for missionaries that had contracted tropical diseases on their travels.

It is believed that all the Hong Kong orchid trees alive today are descendants of this single plant.»All the trees since then have been cultivated by hand, by someone who’s taken a bit of an old tree, and stuck it on to another root stock and let it grow from there,» says Davidson.This process is called «grafting». It has been familiar to gardeners and farmers for thousands of years, so much so that it is easy to forget that it is remarkable.

Only with modern genetics have scientists begun to unravel the mysterious origins of the Hong Kong orchid tree. A study published in 2005 revealed that the strange flower is actually a hybrid of two known species; the pink-flowered butterfly tree (B. variegata), and the purple-flowered B. purpurea. This explains why the trees can only reproduce with human help, by taking cuttings. Just like a mule, B. blakeana is a sterile hybrid. Hybridisation is when a new species is produced by combining half of the DNA of one species with half of the DNA of another. It is a hit-and-miss exercise. Most of the time, it fails because the two halves of DNA are simply too different to work together. The majority of hybrid embryos never develop.

Even when a hybrid does develop into an adult, they are often sterile. We may never know how the original hybrid tree came to be there. But scientists are now using modern genomic techniques to understand the orchid tree better. Lawrence Ramsden of the University of Hong Kong was a member of the team that discovered B. blakeana’s hybrid origin in 2005. He is now leading a search for mutant trees that are fertile. Such trees might exist: with a few mutations in the right places, a sterile B. blakeana could theoretically start producing viable seeds. If they do find a fertile B. blakeanatree, it might not be quite as beautiful as the sterile ones. That is because the flowers of sterile B. blakeana trees «stay in bloom longer because the plant doesn’t put any energy into producing seeds,» says Davidson.However, a fertile tree might just save the species. But until one is found, or one of the other approaches comes to fruition, the Hong Kong orchid tree will have to survive the way it has for the last century.

The orchid tree was chosen as Hong Kong’s emblem because it represents the merging of old and new. So it seems apt that the plant is itself a hybrid, and that it might be saved by melding new technology with old-fashioned amateur naturalism.

18

What does the flower on the flag symbolize?

1) Welcome of new technologies

2) Respect for traditions

3) Cooperation between traditional and modern

4) Green philosophy

№19

Прочитайте приведенные ниже текст. Преобразуйте, если необходимо, слово, напечатанное заглавными буквами после текста, так, чтобы оно грамматически соответствовало содержанию текста. Впишите маленькими буквами полученное слово в поле для ответа.

The lost art of losing

19

Nearly 20 years ago a valuable portrait __________, in bizarre circumstances, from a gallery in the northern Italian city of Piacenza.

STOLE

№20

Прочитайте приведенные ниже текст. Преобразуйте, если необходимо, слово, напечатанное заглавными буквами после текста, так, чтобы оно грамматически соответствовало содержанию текста. Впишите маленькими буквами полученное слово в поле для ответа.

The lost art of losing

20

Until recently there appeared to be little prospect of it ever being recovered — but then police received some perplexing new information, and they now think it ___________ back in the city within weeks or months.

BE

№21

Прочитайте приведенные ниже текст. Преобразуйте, если необходимо, слово, напечатанное заглавными буквами после текста, так, чтобы оно грамматически соответствовало содержанию текста. Впишите маленькими буквами полученное слово в поле для ответа.

The lost art of losing

21

Carabiniere Sgt Maj Salvatore Cavallaro was on a ladder ___________ out on to the roof of Piacenza’s Ricci-Oddi gallery through a partially open skylight.

LOOK

№22

Прочитайте приведенные ниже текст. Преобразуйте, если необходимо, слово, напечатанное заглавными буквами после текста, так, чтобы оно грамматически соответствовало содержанию текста. Впишите маленькими буквами полученное слово в поле для ответа.

The lost art of losing

22

«It doesn’t fit,» he shouted to his colleagues below, as he compared the size of a heavy gilded frame on the roof beside the skylight with the narrow opening (it was much _________ than the police expected). «No way the thief could have fished the painting from up here.»

BIG

№23

Прочитайте приведенные ниже текст. Преобразуйте, если необходимо, слово, напечатанное заглавными буквами после текста, так, чтобы оно грамматически соответствовало содержанию текста. Впишите маленькими буквами полученное слово в поле для ответа.

The lost art of losing

23

Ten months before the incident the Portrait of a Lady ______________ in a drama of a different kind, thanks to a sharp-eyed 18-year-old art student, Claudia Maga.

While flipping through The Complete works of Gustav Klimt she had noticed a strong resemblance between The Lady and another Klimt painting, Portrait of a Young Lady, that had not been seen since 1912.

INVOLVE

№24

Прочитайте приведенные ниже текст. Преобразуйте, если необходимо, слово, напечатанное заглавными буквами после текста, так, чтобы оно грамматически соответствовало содержанию текста. Впишите маленькими буквами полученное слово в поле для ответа.

The lost art of losing

24

Maga got the gallery’s former director, Ferdinando Arisi, interested in her theory. A few weeks later he picked her up from art school, drove her to the gallery, and removed the portrait from its frame. ____________it in brown paper they headed for the local hospital, where sure enough a series of X-rays revealed the dim shadow of the earlier work beneath the surface.

WRAP

№25

Прочитайте приведенные ниже текст. Преобразуйте, если необходимо, слово, напечатанное заглавными буквами после текста, так, чтобы оно грамматически соответствовало содержанию текста. Впишите маленькими буквами полученное слово в поле для ответа.

The lost art of losing

25

The story behind the painting was the next surprise. Klimt had fallen madly in love with a young girl from Vienna, it was said, who had quickly become his muse. Then, when she suddenly died, he painted over _________portrait to forget the pain of his loss.

SHE

№26

Прочитайте приведенный ниже текст. Образуйте от слова, напечатанного заглавными буквами после текста, однокоренное слово так, чтобы оно грамматически и лексически соответствовало содержанию текста. Запишите маленькими буквами полученное слово в поле для ответа.

26

The __________ of Katie Kitamura’s third novel, “A Separation” (Riverhead), is a literary translator, a job that appeals to her because of its “potential for passivity.”

PLEASE

№27

Прочитайте приведенный ниже текст. Образуйте от слова, напечатанного заглавными буквами после текста, однокоренное слово так, чтобы оно грамматически и лексически соответствовало содержанию текста. Запишите маленькими буквами полученное слово в поле для ответа.

27

Today, the dinner table can instead begin to feel like a minefield. Is the bacon on your plate culinary asbestos, and will the wheat in your toast give you “grain brain”? Even the bubbles of gas in your fizzy drinks have been considered _____________

HAZARD

№28

Прочитайте приведенный ниже текст. Образуйте от слова, напечатанного заглавными буквами после текста, однокоренное слово так, чтобы оно грамматически и лексически соответствовало содержанию текста. Запишите маленькими буквами полученное слово в поле для ответа.

28

Worse still, the advice changes continually. As TV-cook Nigella Lawson __________ put it: “You can guarantee that what people think will be good for you this year, they won’t next year.”

RECENT

№29

Прочитайте приведенный ниже текст. Образуйте от слова, напечатанного заглавными буквами после текста, однокоренное слово так, чтобы оно грамматически и лексически соответствовало содержанию текста. Запишите маленькими буквами полученное слово в поле для ответа.

29

This may be somewhat inevitable: evidence-based health advice should be constantly updated as new studies explore the nuances of what we eat and the effects the meals have on our bodies. But when the media (and ill-informed health gurus) exaggerate the results of a study without providing the context, it can lead to ____________ fears that may, ironically, push you towards less healthy choices.

NECESSARY

№30

Прочитайте приведенный ниже текст. Образуйте от слова, напечатанного заглавными буквами после текста, однокоренное слово так, чтобы оно грамматически и лексически соответствовало содержанию текста. Запишите маленькими буквами полученное слово в поле для ответа.

30

We’ve tried to cut through the ___________ by weighing up all the available evidence to date. You may be pleased to learn that many of your favourite foods are not the ticking time bomb you have been led to believe.

CONFUSE

№31

Прочитайте приведенный ниже текст. Образуйте от слова, напечатанного заглавными буквами после текста, однокоренное слово так, чтобы оно грамматически и лексически соответствовало содержанию текста. Запишите маленькими буквами полученное слово в поле для ответа.

31

Artificial __________ may be the lesser of two evils – they may carry some risks, but are still healthier than the full-sugar alternatives.

SWEET

№32

Прочитайте текст с пропусками, обозначенными номерами. Эти номера соответствуют заданиям 32-38, в которых представлены возможные варианты ответов. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

Danny Garcia wants you to respond to his emails — pronto. Take too 32 ____________and he starts getting anxious. He even lies 33_____________at night wondering when you’ll reply.Sending emails creates anxiety for Garcia. Butterflies churn in his stomach from the moment he 34 ______________ send.

That might sound extreme, but actually, it’s not all that uncommon. Waiting 35 _____________ a response can sometimes be anxiety-inducing under the best circumstances. With hundreds of emails finding their way into our inboxes every day, it’s nearly impossible to answer 36 _______________one immediately — if at all.

Plenty of research documents the stress that an overflowing inbox of unread messages can cause — one study found that getting constant email notifications during the day and checking emails in the morning and night 37 ___________increased levels of anxiety. But there are no statistics or research on just how anxious people get when e-mails go unanswered, at least none labelled as 38 _________ according to the American Psychological Association.

32

1) long 2) much 3) many 4) big

№33

Прочитайте текст с пропусками, обозначенными номерами. Эти номера соответствуют заданиям 32-38, в которых представлены возможные варианты ответов. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

Danny Garcia wants you to respond to his emails — pronto. Take too 32 ____________and he starts getting anxious. He even lies 33_____________at night wondering when you’ll reply.Sending emails creates anxiety for Garcia. Butterflies churn in his stomach from the moment he 34 ______________ send.

That might sound extreme, but actually, it’s not all that uncommon. Waiting 35 _____________ a response can sometimes be anxiety-inducing under the best circumstances. With hundreds of emails finding their way into our inboxes every day, it’s nearly impossible to answer 36 _______________one immediately — if at all.

Plenty of research documents the stress that an overflowing inbox of unread messages can cause — one study found that getting constant email notifications during the day and checking emails in the morning and night 37 ___________increased levels of anxiety. But there are no statistics or research on just how anxious people get when e-mails go unanswered, at least none labelled as 38 _________ according to the American Psychological Association.

33

1) asleep 2) tired 3) awake 4) sleepy

№34

Прочитайте текст с пропусками, обозначенными номерами. Эти номера соответствуют заданиям 32-38, в которых представлены возможные варианты ответов. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

Danny Garcia wants you to respond to his emails — pronto. Take too 32 ____________and he starts getting anxious. He even lies 33_____________at night wondering when you’ll reply.Sending emails creates anxiety for Garcia. Butterflies churn in his stomach from the moment he 34 ______________ send.

That might sound extreme, but actually, it’s not all that uncommon. Waiting 35 _____________ a response can sometimes be anxiety-inducing under the best circumstances. With hundreds of emails finding their way into our inboxes every day, it’s nearly impossible to answer 36 _______________one immediately — if at all.

Plenty of research documents the stress that an overflowing inbox of unread messages can cause — one study found that getting constant email notifications during the day and checking emails in the morning and night 37 ___________increased levels of anxiety. But there are no statistics or research on just how anxious people get when e-mails go unanswered, at least none labelled as 38 _________ according to the American Psychological Association.

34

1) clicks 2) kicks 3) beats 4) opens

№35

Прочитайте текст с пропусками, обозначенными номерами. Эти номера соответствуют заданиям 32-38, в которых представлены возможные варианты ответов. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

Danny Garcia wants you to respond to his emails — pronto. Take too 32 ____________and he starts getting anxious. He even lies 33_____________at night wondering when you’ll reply.Sending emails creates anxiety for Garcia. Butterflies churn in his stomach from the moment he 34 ______________ send.

That might sound extreme, but actually, it’s not all that uncommon. Waiting 35 _____________ a response can sometimes be anxiety-inducing under the best circumstances. With hundreds of emails finding their way into our inboxes every day, it’s nearly impossible to answer 36 _______________one immediately — if at all.

Plenty of research documents the stress that an overflowing inbox of unread messages can cause — one study found that getting constant email notifications during the day and checking emails in the morning and night 37 ___________increased levels of anxiety. But there are no statistics or research on just how anxious people get when e-mails go unanswered, at least none labelled as 38 _________ according to the American Psychological Association.

35

1) on 2) for 3) with 4) from

№36

Прочитайте текст с пропусками, обозначенными номерами. Эти номера соответствуют заданиям 32-38, в которых представлены возможные варианты ответов. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

Danny Garcia wants you to respond to his emails — pronto. Take too 32 ____________and he starts getting anxious. He even lies 33_____________at night wondering when you’ll reply.Sending emails creates anxiety for Garcia. Butterflies churn in his stomach from the moment he 34 ______________ send.

That might sound extreme, but actually, it’s not all that uncommon. Waiting 35 _____________ a response can sometimes be anxiety-inducing under the best circumstances. With hundreds of emails finding their way into our inboxes every day, it’s nearly impossible to answer 36 _______________one immediately — if at all.

Plenty of research documents the stress that an overflowing inbox of unread messages can cause — one study found that getting constant email notifications during the day and checking emails in the morning and night 37 ___________increased levels of anxiety. But there are no statistics or research on just how anxious people get when e-mails go unanswered, at least none labelled as 38 _________ according to the American Psychological Association.

36

1) every 2) any 3) some 4) many

№37

Прочитайте текст с пропусками, обозначенными номерами. Эти номера соответствуют заданиям 32-38, в которых представлены возможные варианты ответов. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

Danny Garcia wants you to respond to his emails — pronto. Take too 32 ____________and he starts getting anxious. He even lies 33_____________at night wondering when you’ll reply.Sending emails creates anxiety for Garcia. Butterflies churn in his stomach from the moment he 34 ______________ send.

That might sound extreme, but actually, it’s not all that uncommon. Waiting 35 _____________ a response can sometimes be anxiety-inducing under the best circumstances. With hundreds of emails finding their way into our inboxes every day, it’s nearly impossible to answer 36 _______________one immediately — if at all.

Plenty of research documents the stress that an overflowing inbox of unread messages can cause — one study found that getting constant email notifications during the day and checking emails in the morning and night 37 ___________increased levels of anxiety. But there are no statistics or research on just how anxious people get when e-mails go unanswered, at least none labelled as 38 _________ according to the American Psychological Association.

37

1) collected 2) did 3) showed 4) created

№38

Прочитайте текст с пропусками, обозначенными номерами. Эти номера соответствуют заданиям 32-38, в которых представлены возможные варианты ответов. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

Danny Garcia wants you to respond to his emails — pronto. Take too 32 ____________and he starts getting anxious. He even lies 33_____________at night wondering when you’ll reply.Sending emails creates anxiety for Garcia. Butterflies churn in his stomach from the moment he 34 ______________ send.

That might sound extreme, but actually, it’s not all that uncommon. Waiting 35 _____________ a response can sometimes be anxiety-inducing under the best circumstances. With hundreds of emails finding their way into our inboxes every day, it’s nearly impossible to answer 36 _______________one immediately — if at all.

Plenty of research documents the stress that an overflowing inbox of unread messages can cause — one study found that getting constant email notifications during the day and checking emails in the morning and night 37 ___________increased levels of anxiety. But there are no statistics or research on just how anxious people get when e-mails go unanswered, at least none labelled as 38 _________ according to the American Psychological Association.

38

1) so 2) such 3) this 4) that

№39

You have received a letter from your English-speaking pen-friend Nicole who writes:

…Last weekend was my mom’s anniversary and we had a family gathering. We entertained more than 25 people and lived on leftovers for 2 days after the event. What do you usually cook for special occasions? How often do you entertain people in your family? Do you normally celebrate your family holidays at home, or go to a café or to a club?

Oh, before I forget, my middle brother won our school tennis tournament…

Write a letter to Nicole.

In your letter

  • answer his questions,
  • ask 3 questions about her middle brother.

Write 100—140 words.

Remember the rules of letter writing.

You have 20 minutes to do this task.

Comment on the following statement:

№40

1. The circus is the best entertainment for children.

2. Young people like travelling more than senior citizens.

What is your opinion?

Write 200–250 words.

Use the following plan:

− make an introduction (state the problem)

− express your personal opinion and give 2–3 reasons for your opinion

− express an opposing opinion and give 1–2 reasons for this opposing opinion

− explain why you don’t agree with the opposing opinion

− make a conclusion restating your position

Нажми, чтобы завершить тест и увидеть результаты

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Английский язык (Вариант 7)

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4

 Раздел 1. Аудирование

Вы услышите 6 высказываний. Установите соответствие между высказываниями каждого говорящего A–F и утверждениями, данными в списке 1–7. Используйте каждое утверждение, обозначенное соответствующей цифрой, только один раз. В задании есть одно лишнее утверждение. Вы услышите запись дважды.

1. The weather can affect people’s health and emotions.

2. Bad weather can be the result of human behavior.

3. The stock market depends on weather conditions.

4. Some people have a gift for predicting things.

5. Climate can influence national character.

6. Wet weather can be good in any season.

7. The weather changes according to some objective phenomena.

Говорящий A B C D E F
Утверждение            

Заметили ошибку в тексте?
Выделите её и нажмите Ctrl + Enter

Раздел 1. Аудирование

Прослушайте шесть высказываний.Установите соответствие между высказываниями

каждого говорящего A–F и утверждениями, данными в списке 1–7.

Используйте каждое утверждение, обозначенное соответствующей цифрой,

только один раз. В задании есть одно лишнее утверждение.

Занесите свои ответы в таблицу.

    1) Climate can influence national character.

    2) The weather changes according to some objective phenomena.

    3) The stock market depends on weather conditions.

    4) Bad weather can be the result of human behavior.

    5) Wet weather can be good in any season.

    6) Some people have a gift for predicting things.

    7) The weather can affect people’s health and emotions.

Прослушайте интервью. В заданиях А8–А14 укажите номер выбранного

Вами варианта ответа.

A8 Greg believes that his present professional success depends on …

    1)rich experience.

    2)putting pressure on himself.

    3)his happy family life.

A9 Speaking about his past Greg says that he …

    1)was too busy achieving his goals.

    2)was a good family man.

    3)never experienced a failure.

A10 What is said about Dina’s relations with Greg’s children from his previous marriage?

    1)She is friendly with them.

    2)She tries to avoid meeting them.

    3)She doesn’t know anything about them.

A11 Describing his relations with his little daughter, Greg stresses that …

    1)he now has the opportunity to give her enough attention and care.

    2)it is quite difficult to raise a child at his age.

    3)she is brighter and more spiritual than his other children.

A12 In his youth, Greg had a dream to …

    1)act in westerns.

    2)play jazz.

    3)serve in the army.

A13 What does Greg say about his age?

    1)It has no influence on his career.

    2)It has affected his strength and energy.

    3)It makes him think about stopping work.

A14 Which of the following may refer to one of the most important lessons of Greg’s life?

    1)Plan your life and follow your ambitions.

    2)Life cannot be always perfect.

    3)Anger helps to achieve a lot in life.

Раздел 2. Чтение

Установите соответствие между заголовками 1–8 и текстами A–G.

Занесите свои ответы в таблицу. Используйте каждую цифру только один раз.

В задании один заголовок лишний.

1) It had its finest hour                       5) Ideas on sale

2) A long way to popularity                6) Brilliant ideas and brave deeds

3) A stairway to heaven                      7) Borrowed ideas

4) Extraordinary combinations           8) Revolutionary materials

A) Born in 1743, Thomas Jefferson helped shape the new American nation and

also shaped some of the country’s most famous buildings. The twentieth century

architects who designed the circular Jefferson Memorial in Washington D.C. drew

inspiration from Thomas Jefferson’s architectural ideas. And from where did

Jefferson get his ideas? The Pantheon in Rome! This building with its classical

portico became a model that influenced Western architecture for 2,000 years.

B) Postmodern architecture evolved from the modernist movement, yet

contradicts many of the modernist ideas. Combining new ideas with traditional

forms, postmodernist buildings may startle, surprise, and even amuse. Familiar

shapes and details are used in unexpected ways. Philip Johnson’s AT&T

Headquarters is often cited as an example ofpostmodernism. Like many buildings

in the international style, this skyscraper has a classical facade.

C) The Industrial Revolution in Europe brought about a new trend: the use of

metals instead of wood and stone in construction. Built in 1889, the Eiffel Tower

is perhaps the most famous example of this new use for metal. For 40 years, the

Eiffel Tower measured the tallest in the world. The metal lattice-work, formed

with very pure structural iron, makes the tower both extremely light and able

to withstand tremendous wind forces.

D) By the early 1800s, Belfast had become a major port at the beating heart of

the region’s industry. The launching of the Titanic from the shipways was

attendedby an estimated 100,000 people, showing how important this event

was for Belfast.Many more impressive ships would leave the yard in the coming

years before the decline of the shipbuilding industry began in the 1950s, but the

Titanic marked the zenith of the great shipbuilding era in Belfast.

E) Thomas Andrews was the chief naval architect at the Harland and Wolff

shipyard in Belfast during the early 1900s. He brought the idea of ‘Olympic

class’ ocean liners to life. The most famous of these was Titanic, which he joined

on its first voyage. His actions when the ship sank on 15 April 1912 are believed

to have saved many lives, but at the cost of his own. In his home town of

Comber, the life of Thomas Andrews is commemorated by the Memorial Hall,

opened in 1915.

F) An e-book or “electronic book” is available digitally downloaded, and accessed

through a device such as a computer, a smart phone or, popularly, a portable e-book

reader. In 1971, Michael Hart began storing vast contents of libraries in electronic formats.

Hart named his efforts Project Gutenberg, after the inventor of the printing press. Libraries

were early adopters of the technology. But it took nearly thirty years for the idea of the e-book
to take firm hold with the consumer.

G) The Frankfurt Book Fair is held in October of each year. It usually hosts more than 7,300
exhibitors from 100 countries ranging from Albania to Zimbabwe. For the American book publishing
industry, the Frankfurt Book Fair is predominantly a trade fair, that is, a professional meeting
place for publishers, editors, librarians, book subsidiary rights managers, booksellers, film
producers, authors and many others who are involved in the creation and licensing of book content.

Прочитайте рассказ и выполните задания 1–7. В каждом задании

обведите букву A, B, C или D, соответствующую выбранному вами

варианту ответа.

First Train Trip

I must have been about eight when I made my first train trip. I think I was in

second grade at that time.It was midsummer, hot and wet in central Kansas,

and time for my aunt Winnie’s annual vacation from the store, where she

worked as a clerk six days a week. She invited me to join her on a trip to

Pittsburgh, fifty miles away, to see her sister, my aunt Alice.
«Sally, would you like to go there by train or by car?» aunt Winnie asked.

«Oh, please, by train, aunt Winnie, dear! We’ve been there by car three times

already!»
Alice was one of my favourite relatives and I was delighted to be invited to her

house. As I was the youngest niece in Mother’s big family, the aunties all tended

tospoil me and Alice was no exception. She kept a boarding house for college

students, a two-storey, brown brick building with comfortable, nicely decorated

rooms at the corner of 1200 Kearney Avenue. She was also a world-class cook,

which kept her boarding house full of young people. It seemed to me that their

life was so exciting and joyful.
Since I’d never ridden a train before, I became more and more excited as the

magic day drew near. I kept questioning Mother about train travel, but she just

said,»Wait. You’ll see.» For an eight-year-old, waiting was really difficult, but

finally the big day arrived. Mother had helped me pack the night before, and my

little suitcase was full with summer sundresses, shorts and blouses, underwear

and pyjamas. I was reading Billy Whiskers, a fantastic story about a goat that

once made a train trip to New York, and I had put that in as well. It was almost

midnight when I could go to bed at last.
We arrived at the station early, purchased our tickets and found our car. I was

fascinated by the face-to-face seats so some passengers could ride backwards.

Why would anyone, I thought, want to see where they’d been? I only wanted to

see what lay ahead for me.
Finally, the conductor shouted, «All aboard!» to the people on the platform. They

climbed into the cars, the engineer blew the whistle and clanged the bell, and we

pulled out of the station.
This train stopped at every town between my home in Solomon and Pittsburgh.

It was known as the «milk train» because at one time it had delivered goods as

well as passengers to these villages. I looked eagerly at the signs at each station.

I’d been through all these towns by car, but this was different. The shaky ride of

the coaches, the soft brown plush seats,the smells of the engine drifting back

down the track and in through the open windows made this trip far more exotic.
The conductor, with his black uniform and shiny hat, the twinkling signals that

told the engineer when to stop and go, thrilled me. To an adult, the trip must

haveseemed painfully slow, but I enjoyed every minute.
Aunt Winnie had packed a lunch for us to eat along the way as there was no

dining car in the train. I was dying to know just what was in that big shopping

bag she carried, but she, too, said, «Wait. You’ll see.» Midway, Aunt Winnie pulled

down her shopping bag from the luggage rack above our seats. My eyes widened

as she opened it and began to take out its contents.
I had expected lunchmeat sandwiches, but instead there was a container of fried

chicken, two hardboiled eggs, bread and butter wrapped in waxed paper, crisp

radishes and slim green onions from Winnie’s garden, as well as rosy sliced

tomatoes. She had brought paper plates, paper cups and some of the «everyday»

silverware.A large bottle of cold tea was well wrapped in a dishtowel; the ice had

melted,but it was still chilly. I cautiously balanced my plate on my knees and ate,

wiping mylips and fingers with a large paper napkin. This was living!
When we had cleaned our plates, Aunt Winnie looked into the bag one more

time. The best treat of all appeared – homemade chocolate cakes! Another cup

of cold tea washed these down and then we carefully returned the remains of

the food and silverware to the bag, which Aunt Winnie put into the corner by her

feet. «Almost there,» said my aunt, looking out of the window at the scenery

passing by. And sure enough, as we pulled into the Pittsburgh station we

immediately caught sight of aunt Alice, waiting for us, a smile like the sun

lighting up her face, arms wide open. We got off the train and she led us past the

taxi rank and the bus stop to her car that was parked near the station.
And all the way to her home she was asking about my impressions of my first

train trip and I could hardly find the words to express all the thrill and excitement

that filled me.

 A15. The first time Sally travelled by train was when she

А) had to move to her aunt Alice.

B) had a summer vacation at school.

C) went to Pittsburgh for the first time in her life.

D) visited her aunt Alice together with aunt Winnie.

A16. Aunt Alice made her living by

А) working as a cook.

B) keeping a boarding house.

C) decorating houses.

D) working as a teacher at college.

A17. Sally was waiting for her first train trip so impatiently that she

А) packed her things long before the trip.

B) lost her appetite a week before the trip.

C) asked her Mother many questions about train trips.

D) couldn’t sleep the night before the trip

A18. Sally didn’t like the idea of riding backwards because

А) it could make her sick.

B) she could miss her station.

C) she could miss the conductor.

D) she wanted to see where she was going.

A19. The trip to Pittsburgh by train seemed so exotic to Sally because

А) she had never travelled so far from her native town.

B) travelling by train was very different from a car ride.

C) she had never travelled in comfort.

D) she had never travelled without her parents.

A20. Sally thought that at lunchtime they would have

А) meat sandwiches.

B) bread and butter with coffee.

C) fried chicken, eggs and vegetables.

D) tea with chocolate cakes.

A21. Aunt Alice was waiting for Sally and aunt Winnie

А) at home.

B) in her car.

C) on the platform.

D) at the bus stop.

Прочитайте рассказ и выполните задания 1–7. В каждом задании

обведите букву A, B, C или D, соответствующую выбранному вами

варианту ответа.

First Train Trip

I must have been about eight when I made my first train trip. I think I was in

second grade at that time.It was midsummer, hot and wet in central Kansas,

and time for my aunt Winnie’s annual vacation from the store, where she

worked as a clerk six days a week. She invited me to join her on a trip to

Pittsburgh, fifty miles away, to see her sister, my aunt Alice.
«Sally, would you like to go there by train or by car?» aunt Winnie asked.

«Oh, please, by train, aunt Winnie, dear! We’ve been there by car three times

already!»
Alice was one of my favourite relatives and I was delighted to be invited to her

house. As I was the youngest niece in Mother’s big family, the aunties all tended

tospoil me and Alice was no exception. She kept a boarding house for college

students, a two-storey, brown brick building with comfortable, nicely decorated

rooms at the corner of 1200 Kearney Avenue. She was also a world-class cook,

which kept her boarding house full of young people. It seemed to me that their

life was so exciting and joyful.
Since I’d never ridden a train before, I became more and more excited as the

magic day drew near. I kept questioning Mother about train travel, but she just

said,»Wait. You’ll see.» For an eight-year-old, waiting was really difficult, but

finally the big day arrived. Mother had helped me pack the night before, and my

little suitcase was full with summer sundresses, shorts and blouses, underwear

and pyjamas. I was reading Billy Whiskers, a fantastic story about a goat that

once made a train trip to New York, and I had put that in as well. It was almost

midnight when I could go to bed at last.
We arrived at the station early, purchased our tickets and found our car. I was

fascinated by the face-to-face seats so some passengers could ride backwards.

Why would anyone, I thought, want to see where they’d been? I only wanted to

see what lay ahead for me.
Finally, the conductor shouted, «All aboard!» to the people on the platform. They

climbed into the cars, the engineer blew the whistle and clanged the bell, and we

pulled out of the station.
This train stopped at every town between my home in Solomon and Pittsburgh.

It was known as the «milk train» because at one time it had delivered goods as

well as passengers to these villages. I looked eagerly at the signs at each station.

I’d been through all these towns by car, but this was different. The shaky ride of

the coaches, the soft brown plush seats,the smells of the engine drifting back

down the track and in through the open windows made this trip far more exotic.
The conductor, with his black uniform and shiny hat, the twinkling signals that

told the engineer when to stop and go, thrilled me. To an adult, the trip must

haveseemed painfully slow, but I enjoyed every minute.
Aunt Winnie had packed a lunch for us to eat along the way as there was no

dining car in the train. I was dying to know just what was in that big shopping

bag she carried, but she, too, said, «Wait. You’ll see.» Midway, Aunt Winnie pulled

down her shopping bag from the luggage rack above our seats. My eyes widened

as she opened it and began to take out its contents.
I had expected lunchmeat sandwiches, but instead there was a container of fried

chicken, two hardboiled eggs, bread and butter wrapped in waxed paper, crisp

radishes and slim green onions from Winnie’s garden, as well as rosy sliced

tomatoes. She had brought paper plates, paper cups and some of the «everyday»

silverware.A large bottle of cold tea was well wrapped in a dishtowel; the ice had

melted,but it was still chilly. I cautiously balanced my plate on my knees and ate,

wiping mylips and fingers with a large paper napkin. This was living!
When we had cleaned our plates, Aunt Winnie looked into the bag one more

time. The best treat of all appeared – homemade chocolate cakes! Another cup

of cold tea washed these down and then we carefully returned the remains of

the food and silverware to the bag, which Aunt Winnie put into the corner by her

feet. «Almost there,» said my aunt, looking out of the window at the scenery

passing by. And sure enough, as we pulled into the Pittsburgh station we

immediately caught sight of aunt Alice, waiting for us, a smile like the sun

lighting up her face, arms wide open. We got off the train and she led us past the

taxi rank and the bus stop to her car that was parked near the station.
And all the way to her home she was asking about my impressions of my first

train trip and I could hardly find the words to express all the thrill and excitement

that filled me.
 

A15. The first time Sally travelled by train was when she

А) had to move to her aunt Alice.

B) had a summer vacation at school.

C) went to Pittsburgh for the first time in her life.

D) visited her aunt Alice together with aunt Winnie.

A16. Aunt Alice made her living by

А) working as a cook.

B) keeping a boarding house.

C) decorating houses.

D) working as a teacher at college.

A17. Sally was waiting for her first train trip so impatiently that she

А) packed her things long before the trip.

B) lost her appetite a week before the trip.

C) asked her Mother many questions about train trips.

D) couldn’t sleep the night before the trip

A18. Sally didn’t like the idea of riding backwards because

А) it could make her sick.

B) she could miss her station.

C) she could miss the conductor.

D) she wanted to see where she was going.

A19. The trip to Pittsburgh by train seemed so exotic to Sally because

А) she had never travelled so far from her native town.

B) travelling by train was very different from a car ride.

C) she had never travelled in comfort.

D) she had never travelled without her parents.

A20. Sally thought that at lunchtime they would have

А) meat sandwiches.

B) bread and butter with coffee.

C) fried chicken, eggs and vegetables.

D) tea with chocolate cakes.

A21. Aunt Alice was waiting for Sally and aunt Winnie

А) at home.

B) in her car.

C) on the platform.

D) at the bus stop.

1. The weather can affect people's health and emotions.2. Bad weather  перевод - 1. The weather can affect people's health and emotions.2. Bad weather  русский как сказать

  • Текст
  • Веб-страница

1. The weather can affect people’s health and emotions.
2. Bad weather can be the result of human behavior.
3. The stock market depends on weather conditions.
4. Some people have a gift for predicting things.
5. Climate can influence national character.
6. Wet weather can be good in any season.
7. The weather changes according to some objective phenomena.

0/5000

Результаты (русский) 1: [копия]

Скопировано!

1. Погода может повлиять на здоровье людей и эмоции.2. плохая погода может быть результатом человеческого поведения.3. фондовый рынок зависит от погодных условий.4. Некоторые люди имеют дар для прогнозирования вещей.5. Климат может влиять на национальный характер.6. влажная погода может быть хорошо в любое время года.7. изменения погоды, по мнению некоторых объективных явлений.

переводится, пожалуйста, подождите..

Результаты (русский) 2:[копия]

Скопировано!

1. Погода может повлиять на здоровье и эмоции людей.
2. Плохая погода может быть результатом человеческого поведения.
3. Фондовый рынок зависит от погодных условий.
4. Некоторые люди обладают даром предсказания вещей.
5. климата может влиять на национальный характер.
6. Влажная погода может быть хорошо в любое время года.
7. Изменения погоды по некоторым объективным явлениям.

переводится, пожалуйста, подождите..

Результаты (русский) 3:[копия]

Скопировано!

1.погода может повлиять на здоровье людей и эмоции.2.плохая погода может быть результатом человеческого поведения.3.фондовый рынок зависит от погодных условий.4.некоторые люди есть подарок для прогнозирования вещи.5.изменения могут повлиять на национальный характер.6.влажная погода может быть хорош в любое время года.7.погодные изменения в некоторые объективные явления.

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  • Same hereSame here
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